Richard Charnin: An Open Letter to Nate Silver
An Open Letter to Nate Silver
by Richard Charnin (TruthIsAll)
July 12, 2010
Nate, since your recent hiring by the NY
Times, the R2K flap and your exchanges with Zogby you have been getting lots of
publicity from blogs such as vanity fair and motherjones.com. Your characterization
of Zogby’s expertise says more about you then it does
about him. Zogby correctly projected the True Vote in 2000
(yes, Gore won Florida, despite what the NY
Times said), 2004 and 2008 elections, yet you fail to give
him credit. In fact, you rank him at the bottom. Why?
Because you go along with the media-perpetuated myth that
the recorded vote is sacrosanct. In other words, you
discount the fraud factor and fail to distinguish between
the True Vote and the recorded vote.
Below, you will see why Gore won by
perhaps three million more than his recorded 540,000 vote
margin; why Kerry won the True Vote by 10 million; why the
Democratic Tsunami was denied in the 2006 midterms; and why
Obama won by nearly 22 million votes in 2008, not the 9.5
million recorded.
I hereby challenge
you to try and debunk the data, logic and mathematics used
in True Vote Model. If you cannot do so,
then the underlying premise of your pollster ranking system
(that the recorded vote is an appropriate baseline to
measure performance) is invalid.
As an Internet blogger who has been posting pre-election and exit poll analyses to prove election fraud since 2004, I have occasionally looked at your postings on fivethirtyeight.com. I will say right here that unlike the bloggers and mainstream media (MSNBC, the NY Times, etc.) who extol your forecasting “expertise”, I do not believe you are quite the polling guru that they claim you are.
I say this as one who has been building quantitative models since 1965 for defense/aerospace manufacturers, Wall Street investment banks and has consulted for many financial and corporate enterprises. I have three degrees in Mathematics, including an MS in Applied Mathematics and an MS in Operations Research.
Your 2008 simulation model win probabilities did not sync with the projected vote shares. The major flaw in your model was to conflate it with your pollster rankings, an ill-conceived methodology. The first rule of model building is KISS (keep it simple stupid). You not only introduced an extraneous variable into your model, but the rankings were incorrect – a double whammy. Now, what do I mean by this, you ask?
You fail to distinguish the True
Vote from the Recorded vote by ignoring vote miscounts. The
premise on which your models are based (that fraud does not
exist) is incorrect from the get-go. In your ranking system,
pollsters who come close to the recorded vote (i.e.
Rasmussen in 2004) are ranked high, but pollsters who come
close to the True Vote (i.e. Zogby) are ranked low. The fact
that Zogby is ranked at the bottom is a clear indictment of
your approach. Ranking pollsters based on their performance
against the recorded vote is a waste of time. Fortunately
for you, your fans are unaware of the distinction between
the recorded vote and the True Vote. In fact, most are
unaware of the extent in which their votes have been
compromised by fraud. In your models, election fraud is
never a factor.
This is the simple, yet fundamental
equation that you seem to be blissfully unaware of:
Recorded Vote = True Vote + Fraud.
Since you rank pollsters based on how close their polls match the recorded vote, I assume that exit pollsters Edison-Mitofsky are ranked at the top, since their final state and national exit polls always seem to match the recorded vote. So why don’t they release the unadjusted exit polls as well? These may actually reflect the True Vote. As a Polling Quant, you should be interested in the statistical rationale for the matching.
Check with your new employer, the Grey Lady. The NYT is an important part of the National Exit Pool, the consortium that sponsors the exit polls. The NEP also includes the Washington Post, ABC, CNN, AP and Fox News. That’s plenty of MSM polling power. Ask why they expect transparency from R2K but won’t release the raw, unadjusted precinct exit polls from 2000, 2004 or 2008. That information would be very useful. It might indicate which exit poll precincts show discrepancies to the recorded vote that are virtually impossible mathematically.
What are your thoughts about the 2010 primaries in MA, AR, SC and AL? Does the fact that Coakley won the hand-counts in MA indicate something to you? Does the fact that 40 of 42 SC precincts that favored Halter were closed down indicate something? Or how about the unknown, non-campaigner Greene winning in SC by 59-41% but losing the absentees by 84-16%? The DINOS on the state election commission refused to consider the recommendations of computer scientists to investigate the voting machines that were obviously rigged. In AL on June 8, the attorney general issued an opinion that an automatic recount does not apply in a primary election. Knowing all of this, will you be factoring fraud into your 2010 projections – along with turnout and final polling?
Do you want further confirmation that Kerry won in a landslide? As an “expert” analyst, you should have taken a close look at the 2004 National Exit Poll. If you had, you would have seen that the Final NEP, as is always the case, was forced to match the recorded vote by adjusting the number of returning 2000 voters to an impossible level– as well as the vote shares. According to the NEP, 43% (52.6 million) of 2004 voters were returning Bush 2000 voters. But this was impossible. Bush only had 50.46 million recorded votes. Based on voter mortality tables, 2.5 million Bush 2000 voters died prior to the 2004 election. Therefore at most only 48 million returning Bush voters could have voted in 2004. But if an estimated 98% turned out, 47 million voted. Therefore, the number of returning Bush voters was inflated by at least 5 million. Kerry won the election by 10 million votes. You are welcome to try and refute the True Vote Model.
Do you want to see a proof that Obama won by nearly 22 million votes and not by the recorded 9.5 million? As an “expert” analyst, you should have taken a close look at the 2008 National Exit Poll. If you had, you would have seen that the Final NEP, as is always the case, was forced to match the recorded vote by adjusting the number of returning 2004 voters to an impossible level. According to the NEP, 46% (60 million) of 2008 voters were returning Bush 2004 voters and 37% were returning Kerry voters. That means there were 12 million more returning Bush voters than Kerry voters – and that’s assuming the myth perpetuated by the mainstream media (who you are now going to work for) that Bush won by 3 million votes in 2004. Do you believe it? How could that be?
But it’s much worse than that. If Kerry won by 10 million votes as the True Vote Model indicates (you are welcome to try and refute it) then there were approximately 10 million more returning Kerry voters than Bush voters. Assuming the same NEP vote shares that were used to match the recorded vote, Obama wins by 22 million votes, not the 9.5 million recorded.
The 2008 NEP indicated that 4% (5 million) of the electorate consisted of returning third-party voters. That was clearly impossible; only 1.2 million third-party votes were recorded in 2004. In their zeal to match the recorded vote, the exit pollsters had to create millions of phantom Bush and third-party voters.
In the eleven presidential elections from 1968 to 2008, the Republicans won the popular vote by 49-45%, (6% went to third parties). But the Democrats won the True Vote by 49-45%.
It’s all in my book:
Proving Election Fraud: Phantom Voters,
Uncounted Votes, and the National Exit
Poll.
I was the first election analyst
to use Monte Carlo simulation in the 2004 Election Model followed by the 2008 Election Model. I applied extensive
exit poll analysis in developing
corresponding the post-election True Vote Model. It proves that not only
were the 2000 and 2004 elections stolen, it is very likely
that 1968 and 1988 were as well. There were at least 6
million uncounted votes in 1968 and 11 million in 1988 –
and the majority were Democratic (minority) votes.
The Edison Mitofsky 2004 Evaluation Report provides the exit poll discrepancies (WPE) of 238 state presidential election exit polls from 1988-2004. Of the 66 that exceeded the 3% margin of error, 65 favored the Republican. Was it due to reluctant Bush responders and/or exuberant Democratic responders? No, it was the result of millions of uncounted votes (mostly Democratic) and millions of phantom Bush voters.
The Final 2004 Election Model Projection (Monte Carlo simulation) projected a Kerry win: a 51.3% share and 337 electoral votes. This closely matched the unadjusted aggregate state exit polls (52%) and the 12:22am National Exit Poll (51.2%). The True Vote Model indicated that Kerry had a 53.2% share. Of course Bush won by a bogus 50.7-48.3% recorded vote margin. How did your projections pan out?
In the 2006 midterms, the pre-election Trend Model (based on 120 Generic polls) projected a 56.43% share for the Democrats. The unadjusted National Exit Poll indicated a nearly identical 56.37%. The Final National Exit Poll was forced to match the 52% recorded vote. Nate, which one do you believe was correct? You are aware of documented miscounts in 15 –20 congressional elections, virtually all favoring the GOP (see FL–13, FL-24, OH-1, etc.). How did your projections pan out?
The Final 2008 Election Model Projection (Monte Carlo simulation) exactly matched Obama’s 365 electoral votes and was within 0.2%(53.1%) of his 52.9% share. But it was wrong. Obama did much better than that. The final state pre-election likely voter (LV) polls did not fully capture the late shift to Obama. Had they been registered voter (RV) polls, adjusted for undecided voters, Obama would have had a 57% share. He had 57% and 420 EV in the True Vote Model. As shown below, the final Gallup RV tracking poll gave Obama a 53-40% margin. After allocating undecided voters, he had 57% - matching the True Vote Model. How did your projections pan out?
So what does it all
mean?
It means that any
and all polling analysis that fails to consider voter
mortality, uncounted votes and a feasible voter turnout is
doomed to produce the wrong result. The correct result is
the True Vote based on total votes cast. The wrong result is
the recorded vote that ignores uncounted votes but includes
phantom voters.
It means that the recorded vote, the basis
for your rankings, never reflects the True Vote!
It exposes your ranking
system, which places John Zogby (the only pollster to
predict the True Vote in the last three presidential
elections) at the bottom of a list of scores of obscure
pollsters, as being fatally flawed.
It means that your
comments disparaging exit polls, along with your failure to
do post-election True Vote analyses, indicate that you are
in sync with a moribund mainstream media that perpetuates
endemic Election Fraud by withholding raw exit poll data.
They accept the recorded vote as Gospel - just as you do in
your rankings. You will fit in very well at the NY
Times.
When will you incorporate the True Vote into your analysis? Why do you ignore the fact that the mainstream media (i.e. the National Election Pool, which includes the NY Times) is responsible for the impossible adjustments (made by the exit pollsters they employ) to the final 2004, 2006, 2008 state and national exit polls? They had to match the polls to corrupted recorded vote counts, come hell or high water - and will surely do so again in 2010.
You have questioned the R2K Democratic share of the 18-29 age group exceeding the 30-44 group in 20 of 20 races.
Table 1 shows the probabilities for all the age
groups.
There was a 33% probability that the
Dems would do better in the 18-29 group than the 30-44 group
in all 20 races given the average two-party shares. The
comparable probabilities were 77% for 45-59 and nearly 100%
for 60+.
You have also questioned the apparent lack of volatility in the 2008 R2K tracking polls.
Table
2 displays R2K daily statistics.
The margin of
error is 1.96 times the standard deviation (a measure of
volatility) at the 95% confidence level.
The standard
deviation of Obama’s daily poll shares was 1.83%. It was
1.59% for the 3-day moving average.
Table 3 is a
comparison of Gallup vs. R2K.
Gallup was a
registered voter (RV) poll. R2K was a likely voter (LV)
poll.
The average shares and volatilities (standard
deviation) closely match.
There
was a strong 0.70 correlation between Obama’s Gallup and
R2K shares.
There was a good 0.50
correlation between McCain’s Gallup and R2K
shares.
Gallup Change Change R2K Change Change
Obama McCain Obama McCain Obama McCain Obama McCain
Avg 49.65 42.90 0.15 -0.15 50.29 42.21 0.06 -0.02
Stdev 2.02 1.74 0.94 0.89 1.59 1.86 0.70 0.73
Table
4 compares the R2K tracking poll and other polls (including
standard, non-tracking polls)
Projections are
based on the allocation of undecided voters (UVA).
Assumptions
1) 75% of the undecided
vote is allocated to Obama, the de-facto challenger.
2)
third parties have 1.5% (the actual recorded
share).
The final Gallup projection (57.1%) for
Obama is a close match to the True Vote Model
(57.5%).
Obamal projected shares:
Gallup:
53 + .75 * 5.5 = 53 + 4.13 = 57.1%
R2K: 51 +
.75 * 3.5 = 51 + 2.63 = 53.6%